Flann O'Brien

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (159 of them)
I'm reading ASTB as well Jordan, but am only 50 pages or so into it (the wild west stuff). Finding it funny, so that bodes well as I get further in.

Jaq (Jaq), Tuesday, 26 September 2006 14:08 (seventeen years ago) link

one year passes...

Updike on Flann:

http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/books/2008/02/11/080211crbo_books_updike

scott seward, Sunday, 10 February 2008 02:54 (sixteen years ago) link

two years pass...

I heart Brendan Gleeson but really??? Am not at all sure.

Hongro Horace (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 7 September 2010 16:58 (thirteen years ago) link

yeah likewise. vanity disaster project.

well, prob not disaster but certainly can't see it shining

k¸ (darraghmac), Tuesday, 7 September 2010 16:59 (thirteen years ago) link

worse case scenario it's a crap film you won't have to see. gleeson is a great actor anyway.

no time for the prussian death cult (nakhchivan), Tuesday, 7 September 2010 17:17 (thirteen years ago) link

I haven't watched the show, but wasn't there renewed interest in Flann when the TV show Lost mentioned The Third Policeman?

Poldark City (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 7 September 2010 17:19 (thirteen years ago) link

Only saw In Bruges the other week and was strongly reminded of The Third Policeman. It's still mostly brilliant tho.

Hongro Horace (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 7 September 2010 17:20 (thirteen years ago) link

I've seen the 60s movie of Ulysses btw and it's not dreadful, just pointless.

Hongro Horace (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 7 September 2010 17:20 (thirteen years ago) link

I'm excited, actually - like In Bruges.

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 7 September 2010 17:53 (thirteen years ago) link

This is quite exciting in a way!

Trying to work out what can be BAD about such a thing, I think it is that it (the bad film, when it's bad) somehow supplants and displaces the great book, in the distracted public memory or something, even though you don't want to let this affect you and may affect to ignore it entirely. And esp this is bad if the film is very different in plot etc.

But then such bad things are not that bad, compared to life's really bad things.

And the film might not even be bad.

the pinefox, Tuesday, 7 September 2010 17:57 (thirteen years ago) link

I will say that the project doesn't seem utterly impossible, but the chances of success seem fairly remote. A lot of things happen in ASTB; it often bursts with life and incident. And ASTB has a certain coherence, achieved through its consistent tone and playfulness. But a coherent plot is nowhere to be found and was never contemplated by the author as a necessity.

In order to "work" as a feature film, ASTB would almost certainly require the imposition upon it of a more coherent plot, including both a first and a final act. Once you have imposed a coherent plot, you have probably driven a stake into the heart of the book.

I wish them well.

Aimless, Tuesday, 7 September 2010 18:20 (thirteen years ago) link

He could go the Naked Lunch or Tristram Shandy route and make it a film about the book, since it's often a book about books itself.

Hongro Horace (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 7 September 2010 18:37 (thirteen years ago) link

one year passes...

i am reading the third policeman, which i have not done before.

at-zing-two-boards (darraghmac), Monday, 10 October 2011 00:33 (twelve years ago) link

gj

puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Monday, 10 October 2011 00:36 (twelve years ago) link

incredible book imo

puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Monday, 10 October 2011 00:36 (twelve years ago) link

yeah it is a good one

call all destroyer, Monday, 10 October 2011 00:37 (twelve years ago) link

I was at a bookseller's convention once and the dalkey rep there (the book's publisher) said that this was the publisher's highest selling book by far because it was featured for 3 secs in the show Lost

puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Monday, 10 October 2011 00:40 (twelve years ago) link

i've read lots of compendium myles na gcopaleen stuff but never his longer works, and am going in blind tbh.

enjoying it v much so far

at-zing-two-boards (darraghmac), Monday, 10 October 2011 00:41 (twelve years ago) link

i would like to point out that i've not been prompted by lost, tbf. there's been a lot made of o'brien the past few weeks in the irish times due to the centenary of his birth and it seemed time

at-zing-two-boards (darraghmac), Monday, 10 October 2011 00:44 (twelve years ago) link

at swim two big bottomed birds all over the newsie wewsies

nakhchivan, Monday, 10 October 2011 00:46 (twelve years ago) link

i'm unpacking queen, o'brien, obviously my own post and, bizarrely, whiney g

Did i miss or misappropriate anything

at-zing-two-boards (darraghmac), Monday, 10 October 2011 00:50 (twelve years ago) link

i like how i was v confident in predicting gleeson's failure to produce a satisfactory filmic version of a book i haven't read upthread, vmic that

at-zing-two-boards (darraghmac), Monday, 10 October 2011 00:51 (twelve years ago) link

lol

nakhchivan, Monday, 10 October 2011 00:52 (twelve years ago) link

mathers-like refusal of everything

at-zing-two-boards (darraghmac), Monday, 10 October 2011 00:54 (twelve years ago) link

Third Policeman = awesome
Poor Mouth = much less awesome

nostormo, Monday, 10 October 2011 01:13 (twelve years ago) link

Thought this revive would be about the 100th anniversary: http://www.irishtimes.com/indepth/100-myles/

ATSB is my favourite book of all time but for my shame I have never read anything else by FO'B. I do have an unread copy of An Béal Bocht lying around somewhere...

psychedelicatessen (seandalai), Monday, 10 October 2011 01:27 (twelve years ago) link

well the centenary was involved alright

Read 'miles of myles' maybe 15 years ago and always meant to look further but tbf robert jordan happened and y'know yourself.

at-zing-two-boards (darraghmac), Monday, 10 October 2011 01:32 (twelve years ago) link

I think An Béal Bocht would be a lot funnier to someone who spent many, many years mastering the Oirish Tongue via the solemn study of several dozen memoirs written by simple villagers from the Gaeltacht, whose like we shall never see again, I might add, nor, belike, their little curraghs and wee piggies.

Aimless, Monday, 10 October 2011 01:56 (twelve years ago) link

i think i could dig it, istr a couple of scenes he wrote lampooning eg synge, o'casey and poss. yeats's depictions of prataí munching ochóners that were on-the-mark

at-zing-two-boards (darraghmac), Monday, 10 October 2011 01:59 (twelve years ago) link

I have not encountered a MILES OF MYLES.

the pinefox, Monday, 10 October 2011 08:17 (twelve years ago) link

i think that was it, at least

at-zing-two-boards (darraghmac), Monday, 10 October 2011 09:51 (twelve years ago) link

I think An Béal Bocht would be a lot funnier to someone who spent many, many years mastering the Oirish Tongue via the solemn study of several dozen memoirs written by simple villagers from the Gaeltacht, whose like we shall never see again, I might add, nor, belike, their little curraghs and wee piggies.

― Aimless, Monday, October 10, 2011 1:56 AM (Yesterday) Bookmark

i think it does a good job of giving you an idea of the object of its parody in its own form? i certainly enjoyed it, myself, more purely than i did the two nominally great novels

thomp, Tuesday, 11 October 2011 10:50 (twelve years ago) link

it seems there was never such a book as 'miles of myles'. How sinister.

shite pele (darraghmac), Tuesday, 11 October 2011 15:46 (twelve years ago) link

I'd read several of those Gaeltacht memoirs prior to reading The Poor Mouth, though all of them in English translation to be sure, so I missed whatever clever wordplay O'Brien may have inserted in the original language.

Aimless, Tuesday, 11 October 2011 15:49 (twelve years ago) link

In each cabin there was: (i) one man at least, called the 'Gambler', a rakish individual, who spent much of his life carousing in Scotland, playing cards and billiards, smoking tobacco and drinking spirits in taverns; (ii) a worn, old man who spent the time in the chimney-corner bed and who arose at the time of night-visiting to shove his two hooves into the ashes, clear his throat, redden his pipe and tell stories about the bad times; (iii) a comely lassie called Nuala or Babby or Mabel or Rosie for whom men came at the dead of every night with a five-noggin bottle and one of them seeking to espouse her. One knows not why but that is how it was. He who thinks that I speak untruly, let him read the good books, or the guid buiks.

alimosina, Tuesday, 11 October 2011 19:13 (twelve years ago) link

ya i knew that auld fella surely he was a strong fine gael man the same buck.

shite pele (darraghmac), Tuesday, 11 October 2011 20:16 (twelve years ago) link

this may be heresy and i suspect it's an exceptional case, but did anyone not particularly enjoy "at swim two birds"?

i found parts of it funny but other parts just kinda read like madcap paddywhackery...and actually like a very irish mockery of anything/everything. in a bad way though, sort of anti-intellectual.

When a German communicates, you listen (LocalGarda), Tuesday, 11 October 2011 21:06 (twelve years ago) link

there's a bit of talk about it here -
Let's have a heated debate about At Swim-Two-Birds
I'm not a huge fan of it. idk if it's anti-intellectual - it's sceptical about students (& yes, o'brien's always ready to take a pop at that kind of intellectual life), but lots of its parody is more than affectionate - like I think he's trying to have it both ways with the Finn Mac Cool stuff and bardic poetry, writing something rather lovely while having fun (I don't think he pulls it off) - all the 'pint of plain' business coming right afterwards is meant to be a bit dismal & cloddish as well as funny (that O'Brien thing again of loving & recreating irish speech patterns, while seeming to be in despair at being stuck on an island with all this plain ppl nonsense (yet never making an effort to get away.))

I think his love for Joyce shows what he doesn't want to just mock - not something intellectual, exactly, but intelligent & imaginative labour.

you don't exist in the database (woof), Tuesday, 11 October 2011 22:07 (twelve years ago) link

well it's just cynicism, isn't it? Not even anti-anything so much as sceptical of what's behind it or where it'll end up. It's hardly a peculiarly irish trait but it's fairly deeply embedded in the national culture imo.

shite pele (darraghmac), Tuesday, 11 October 2011 23:50 (twelve years ago) link

i dunno, i don't think it's cynicism. it's more sort of mockery, nudge-winkery. i really like the pint of plain stuff. i read "the death of virgil" about the same time as "at swim..." and i sort of was like "well classical references are actually pretty great".

i agree unlikely he was majorly hateful about that kind of thing, but sort of like "let's have a laugh at this stuff come on lads" is a bit irritatingly irish.

When a German communicates, you listen (LocalGarda), Thursday, 13 October 2011 22:25 (twelve years ago) link

i'd stil classify even the mockery as cynical but yeah it wasn't poisonous, just a bit of roughhousing. Wasn't he renowned as the scourge of the lit&deb in his day at ucd?

shite pele (darraghmac), Friday, 14 October 2011 11:33 (twelve years ago) link

i think like all curmudgeons there are a few knee-jerk conservative positions that probably struck him at one time as being particularly clever or insightful or challopsy and which hardened into pure unbending grumpiness, the kind that would make you wince if he were actually saying it to you. i particularly remember him coming back, again and again to the idea that "people who demand equality are always the people who least deserve it" or somesuch poisonous phrasing of this sentiment

TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Friday, 14 October 2011 11:39 (twelve years ago) link

that said i love the guy; even these issues i have with him are like what oliver wendell holmes described as reassuring prejudices, that one can rub one's back against, the way a cow rubs his against a tree.

TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Friday, 14 October 2011 11:54 (twelve years ago) link

i spend fifteen years in therapy and a dude on the internet nails it in one sentence

shite pele (darraghmac), Friday, 14 October 2011 12:01 (twelve years ago) link

while seeming to be in despair at being stuck on an island with all this plain ppl nonsense (yet never making an effort to get away.)

He couldn't get away. He was doing pretty well for himself as a young man in the civil service, but suddenly had to support a family of 12. His brother says doing that was his greatest work.

Despair at being stuck, yes. Reading his biography killed a lot of the funniness for me.

alimosina, Friday, 14 October 2011 14:57 (twelve years ago) link

one year passes...

is jem casey's much-admired hackery for the working man not close to sean o`casey?

bob_sleigher (darraghmac), Tuesday, 28 May 2013 22:03 (ten years ago) link

one month passes...

Yes, I think that's the most direct inspiration for the character.

the pinefox, Sunday, 30 June 2013 15:42 (ten years ago) link

ty pf!

dj hollingsworth vs dj perry (darraghmac), Sunday, 30 June 2013 20:28 (ten years ago) link

three weeks pass...

Might read this again, slower

mundane peaceable username (darraghmac), Monday, 22 July 2013 12:00 (ten years ago) link

The brother was givin out about the seals. ‘Tumblers’ he called them. The brother says all them lads should be destroyed.

JoeStork, Thursday, 18 April 2019 15:39 (five years ago) link

The Plain People of Ireland: Another day gone and no jokes.
Myself: Yes, curse you.

The conclusion of your syllogism, I said lightly, is fallacious, being based upon licensed premises.

fetter, Tuesday, 23 April 2019 15:34 (four years ago) link

nine months pass...

ive zero requirement for this rather natty hodges-figgis special hardback of astb but for 6.50 it's hard to justify leaving it here in the sale rack

BSC Joan Baez (darraghmac), Saturday, 1 February 2020 13:55 (four years ago) link

Which one? It’s not on their site.

hyds (gyac), Saturday, 1 February 2020 13:56 (four years ago) link

https://i.imgur.com/51ykimp.jpg

BSC Joan Baez (darraghmac), Saturday, 1 February 2020 14:02 (four years ago) link

and now you even know where im sitting

BSC Joan Baez (darraghmac), Saturday, 1 February 2020 14:03 (four years ago) link

Oh it is on there - it’s £10. Gorgeous edition.

hyds (gyac), Saturday, 1 February 2020 14:04 (four years ago) link

If you mean in H&F, I haven’t been there since Bertie was Taoiseach.

hyds (gyac), Saturday, 1 February 2020 14:05 (four years ago) link

hopefully youll be back before hes president wha

BSC Joan Baez (darraghmac), Saturday, 1 February 2020 14:07 (four years ago) link

I see they have a vintage tractors calendar 75% off - is that what you went in for?

hyds (gyac), Saturday, 1 February 2020 14:07 (four years ago) link

saturdays is H/F ----> celtic whiskey store days on dawson st, if anything catches my eye in either so be it

BSC Joan Baez (darraghmac), Saturday, 1 February 2020 14:09 (four years ago) link

I've my two copies of ATSB already and that's enough to keep a man well-supplied and ready at the drop of a hat.

A is for (Aimless), Saturday, 1 February 2020 17:35 (four years ago) link

Both obtained upon licensed premises no doubt

TS: Kirk/Spock vs. Marat/Sade (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 1 February 2020 17:39 (four years ago) link

Oddly I only have one.

I believe that hardback is the 2019 80th anniversary edition.

I didn't think that Darraghmac lived in Dublin.

the pinefox, Sunday, 2 February 2020 20:05 (four years ago) link

Next to Joyce and Paul Bowles I'm pretty sure this is the author of whose work I've read the most completely.

Montegays and Capulez (flamboyant goon tie included), Sunday, 2 February 2020 23:31 (four years ago) link

Oddly I only have one.

I believe that hardback is the 2019 80th anniversary edition.

I didn't think that Darraghmac lived in Dublin.

― the pinefox, Sunday, 2 February 2020 20:05 (three hours ago) bookmarkflaglink

Next to Joyce and Paul Bowles

BSC Joan Baez (darraghmac), Sunday, 2 February 2020 23:40 (four years ago) link

god the stink must be bad by now

GK Chessington's World of Adventure (Noodle Vague), Sunday, 2 February 2020 23:51 (four years ago) link

well joyce is in bronze tbf

BSC Joan Baez (darraghmac), Sunday, 2 February 2020 23:56 (four years ago) link

If you only have one copy and you reread it frequently, there is a serious risk of you becoming quantumly entangled with the book, due to mollycules. You will find yourself increasingly wishing to rest on shelves. Or check yourself back into libraries. Beware.

Okay, you're an ambulance (Ye Mad Puffin), Monday, 3 February 2020 01:40 (four years ago) link

Ports plan for Brexit Irish Sea checks

"We are still in this territory of not getting clarity from the government just yet as to how they actually see trade agreements being, because if we get good trade agreements, we won't need to have certain checks."

Never forget that tenure by sochemaunce seisined by feodo copyholds in gross and reseisined through covenants of foeffseignory in frankalpuissaunce is alienable only by droit of bonfeasaunce subsisting in free-bench coigny or in re-vested copywrites of seisina facit stipidem, a fair copy bearing a 2d. stamp to be entered at the Court of Star Chamber.

Furthermore, a rent seck indentured with such frankalseignory or chartamoign charges as may be, and re-empted in Market Overt, subsists thereafter in graund serjaunty du roi, eighteen fishing smacks being deemed sufficient to transport the stuff from Lisbon.

alimosina, Monday, 3 February 2020 15:42 (four years ago) link

too real

i eat my lunch under a sketch by the great man's brother

BSC Joan Baez (darraghmac), Monday, 3 February 2020 16:01 (four years ago) link

One dilly dallying civil servant recognised another

hyds (gyac), Monday, 3 February 2020 16:02 (four years ago) link

voting 'coigny'

TOO LOW, the Curator (imago), Monday, 3 February 2020 16:03 (four years ago) link

I have just the one copy, but it's had Premier Handling*.

*Each volume to be thoroughly handled, eight leaves in each to be dog-eared, a suitable passage in not less than 25 volumes to be underlined in red pencil, and a leaflet in French on the works of Victor Hugo to be inserted as a forgotten book-mark in each. Say, £2 17s 6d. Five per cent discount for literary university students, civil servants and lady social workers

fetter, Tuesday, 4 February 2020 12:44 (four years ago) link

one year passes...

http://www.eerpublishing.com/gallacher-bohemian-belfast-and-dublin.html

Obscure stuff, from an obscure press, but this book could be quite interesting on the postwar Flann and his Dublin.

the pinefox, Thursday, 16 September 2021 13:53 (two years ago) link

nine months pass...

just finished 'the hard life' - brisk and well-observed but patently weighted with what must have been the writer's own mounting woes, very little allowed to transcend except the irrepressible brother

imago, Thursday, 23 June 2022 12:49 (one year ago) link

One of the oddest things about that book is how much is taken up with the brother (Manus?) 's letters. They fill page after page. I don't think FO'B entirely knew what he was doing in that regard.

Kind of interesting about Mr Collopy's campaign and his audience with the Pope, though.

the pinefox, Thursday, 23 June 2022 13:16 (one year ago) link

Well, the letters don't start really happening until the final third, but then oh boy. It's almost like the narrator is being written out of his own book, which I presume intentionally-done

imago, Thursday, 23 June 2022 13:18 (one year ago) link

The narrator does otoh have the pleasure of being able to dismiss the brother's reams of advice with disillusioned curtness, so there's right of reply

imago, Thursday, 23 June 2022 13:19 (one year ago) link

I do wonder if FOB harboured an as-it-happens impossible desire to move to London at this time

imago, Thursday, 23 June 2022 13:21 (one year ago) link

Myles would reminisce about Germany.

Curse it, my mind races back to my Heidelberg days. Sonya and Lili. And Magda. And Ernst Schmutz, Georg Geier, Theodor Winklemann, Efrem Zimbalist, Otto Grun. And the accordion player Kurt Schachmann. ... Beer and music and midnight swims in the Neckar. Chats in erse with Kun O'Meyer and John Marquess... Alas, those chimes. Und als wir nahmen/ Abscheid vor den Toren/ beim letzten Kuss, da hab' Ich Klar erkannt/ dass Ich mein Herz/ in Heidelberg verloren/ MEIN HERZ/ es schlagt am Neck-ar-strand! Tumpty tumpty tum.

He couldn't go anywhere, he had to support the family. The only escape was alcohol.

alimosina, Thursday, 23 June 2022 18:23 (one year ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.